
Fred T. Jane's Aerial Torpedo Attack – 'Rain of Fire' Battle Scene, c.1890s
Comparable to the aerial warfare visions of Albert Robida and H.G. Wells-era illustrators, this dramatic full-page plate by Fred T. Jane depicts a futuristic naval bombardment with torpedo-shaped flying craft unleashing explosive devastation across a stormy sky. A distant warship silhouette anchors the upper left as two sleek, propeller-driven aerial torpedoes streak through cascading fire and light. The halftone printing and dynamic composition capture Victorian speculative warfare at its most breathlessly urgent.
The kinetic chaos of aerial torpedoes trailing fire against a lurid burst of light is exactly the kind of Victorian future-war spectacle that sold books. Jane's dynamic composition puts you right in the middle of the firestorm.
“"The rain of fire spread out far and wide." To face p. 344. FRED T. JANE”





